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Monthly Archives

Entries from May 1, 2007 - May 31, 2007

3:11AM

Move to Japan AND China

ARTICLE: Inside the Ring, By Bill Gertz, Washington Times, May 18, 2007

No surprise here: China's growing importance to the U.S. as a trade partner undermines our security relationship with Japan, which, quite frankly, needs to move beyond notions of "containing" China's rise and toward embedding it in shared security and trade regimes, like the expansion of ASEAN toward an EU-like entity and the replication of a NATO for East Asia.

You want to sell F-22s to Japan and not have Beijing balk, then sell them to Beijing too.

Inconceivable! I know.

But I will see such things unfold over my career--and sooner than you think.

We have common threats already. Soon enough we'll share common junior security partners.

2:26AM

The perfect globalization trifecta of headlines

ARTICLE: "As Meth Trade Goes Global, South Africa Becomes a Hub: Cape Town Gangs Trade Rare Shellfish for Drugs; Chinese, Russian Ties," by Mark Schoofs, Wall Street Journal, 21 May 2007, p. A1.

ARTICLE: "In India, Clashes Erupt As Industry Expands: South Korea's Posco Wants Farmers to Move; Mr. Sahoo at Barricades," by Peter Wonacott, Wall Street Journal, 21 May 2007, p. A1.

ARTICLE: "China Puts Cash To Work in Deal With Blackstone: Private-Equity Stake Promises More Profit From Reserves Stockpile," by Kate Linebaugh, Henny Sender, Andrew Batson, Wall Street Journal, 21 May 2007, p. A1.

A perfect trifecta of globalization's advance.

First, we have the newly connected using those connections for illegal narcotics. All New Core heavies involved: Russia, China, South Africa.

Yes, yes, the first ones to take advantage . . .

Second, we have India's industrialization plans, led by outsider and New Core state South Korea, triggering caboose-braking from farmers whose lands are subject to seizure.

Finally, we have China and its $1.2 trillion deciding it's still mostly going to America, just not to the Treasury.

Coming, going, connecting, taking advantage, rules flying everywhere.

Think America's in control? Think if we get bored or tired or pissed off enough that globalization can be made to go away?

3:10PM

First draft of book proposal

Spent much of day cranking our just over 4,000 words on the proposal. Surprisingly easy to write.

Will spend tomorrow working over before sending to agent Jennifer and editor Mark.

A very exciting prospect!

9:12AM

The Big Bang can be salvaged

ARTICLE: 'Second Life for Study Group: Iraq Woes Lead To a Reappraisal,' By Michael Abramowitz, Washington Post, May 21, 2007; Page A01

If the ISG's ideas are finally pursued for real, then the Big Bang can be salvaged.

But that whole process must begin with the realization that we find a place for Iran in the region, and on that basis get ourselves back in the business of subverting through business as opposed to trying to isolate an Iran that will only retaliate against us and our efforts throughout the region.

That was always the underlying message of the ISG: first things first and stop trying to roll the entire region all at once. The long war doesn't have to be wrapped up in one administration (duh!), any more than the Cold War, so handwringing over who "loses" what or who "wins" is silly. This is going to be a long sequence of events, with hard kills rare and soft kills prevalent--just like in the Cold War.

Not rocket science, just patience--and the maturity to move beyond Bush's incompetency and need for vindication.

So we'll see if things finally get realistic, or whether the war-mongering on Iran will continue as an additional track doomed to derail this one.

Time to trash the talking points, Secretary Rice, and begin assuming the responsibility of your post for real.

12:08PM

An overwrought, ideologically myopic argument

THE CHINA CHALLENGE: A Shining Model of Wealth Without Liberty, By James Mann, Washington Post, May 20, 2007, Page B01

An overwrought argument from Mann, who specializes in them.

China is no "new" model or threat. It follows the model of Singapore, and before that South Korea, and before that Japan: a single-party state that bases almost all of its legitimacy on rising income and development through export-driven growth. It is a self-liquidating model: eventually the society wants more political freedom to go with that wealth. China's just so fricking huge and so poor that this process isn't going fast enough for Mann--hence the inevitable "threat."

Mann recognizes neither those past examples nor the significant economic and personal freedoms unleashed inside China over the past quarter century. His Z not having been reached fast enough, he discounts all movement from A since the bizarre depths of Mao's cultural revolution, which is no more distant politically than our Vietnam.

While China's "new" model, such as it is, appeals greatly to many authoritarian regimes in the Gap, there are scant few there that can possibly replicate it (yeah, size matters)..

I mean, name one Gap regime to date that has successfully emerged using China's model? Just interacting with China economically hardly connotes successful subversion to its model. It simply indicates recognition that external economic connectivity is a prerequisite for raising incomes at home, and yeah, if you're an authoritarian leader ruling over a stagnate economy, that's attractive.

As for our take on it, we should logically welcome any so-called model that promotes external economic connectivity, because we know where that goes historically (i.e., where Japan and South Korea finally ended up: creating political freedoms that match their system's potential--something that took us a while to achieve as well).

In short, China carries our economic model's water for us, pushing us to marry up our political model with it over time (what we seek to encourage in China, we logically seek to encourage in similar situations across the Gap). Hardly an alternative model, China's path is but a steppingstone to outcomes we naturally seek. I mean, crawling might be described as an alternative to walking, but only until you're able to walk, then it suddenly seems like a passing phase.

China's "model" will never move beyond crawling, because it's about transforming a hugely rural, impoverished, disconnected society (one-sixth of humanity) into an urban, consumeristic, connected one. Once achieved, and China is nowhere near that at this time, with well over half its population still living in very Gap-like conditions, then its model self-liquidates that all before it.

China's future leaders know this, so do our smart observers. Mann ain't one of the them. He knows his China from a long way back now, and he'll never recognize another.

Confusing China's influence-peddling with model propagation is a new academic fad in search of actual data to prove its distinctiveness, but there is none. China's model is not unique, but a copycat of something we've seen before in "rising Asia," just not on this scale. Prior to that, the USSR had its own bankrupt version. China's model will extend itself only where China extends itself, and since China's economic ties remain exceedingly mercantilistic, that won't be far.

In short, the academic tomes touting China's "victory" are arriving just as the Gap is beginning to turn on China, and just as China's starts feeling the scary blowback from its extension of trade nets deep into the Gap. As always, the academics are right on time.

Hardly a great threat, this "model," but merely a tool to be manipulated by leaders more strategically imaginative than our current crew--or the ideologically-myopic Mann.

12:04PM

That's not how intell works

ARTICLE: 'Assessments Made in 2003 Foretold Situation in Iraq: Intelligence Studies List Internal Violence, Terrorist Activity,' By Walter Pincus, Washington Post, May 20, 2007; Page A06

There are always intell reports that explore all potential downsides. Their existence proves nothing, because that's intell's job: list me the bad things that can happen if I do this, or if I don't do this.

It's like the surgeon telling you before the op about all possible complications. Their potentiality is but one element to be calculated in your decision.

That's why this notion of "faulty intell" is all wrong. It's not how intell works. You get a range of potential outcomes (inevitably, all worst case) and then you make your call.

The presumption of "good" or "bad" intell can't really be proven per se. Some always ends up being "amazingly prescient," the rest is a load of hyperbolic crap.

When things work out, no one cares about all the "bad" intell. But when it goes badly (always for a host of reasons and decisions, or simply because the decisionmakers prefer the sub-optimal outcome to no action at all), then the "amazingly prescient" intell is inevitably touted as "proof" of the intell "failure" (I made this argument first in PNM).

Also inevitably, there will be calls for "reform," none of which can possibly overcome this essentially political decisionmaking process, nor will it stop the very same politicians from declaring their pet defense programs "crucial" because "we live in a world of COMPLETE UNCERTAINTY!"

In short, no president can be "controlled" or "corrected" by perfect intelligence--a useless concept if ever there was one.

Bush and Cheney made their decisions. Until the casualties began piling up ("high" by today's standards, marginal by yesterday's), their decisionmaking was supported--in poll after poll and congressional vote after vote--by the clear majority of Americans and their leaders. Once the bodies piled up and a sense of non-progress ensued, a clear majority turned against those decisions--and those decisionmakers.

That's just how it works in our political system.

So the real correction is--duh!--get the casualties down, not "fix intell."

Iraq stopped being a binary outcome a long time ago. Kurdistan is where we've won, and Kurdistan is where we'll manage to define a partial victory, reduce our exposure and casualties by concentrating the bulk of our troops there, and continue to sequence the rest of Iraq toward something better over time (back to Hoagland and Friedman--and me for two-plus years now--on engaging Iran and keeping this Big Bang strategy alive).

For some, it will always be solely about kinetics and the intell that justifies it.

To others, it'll always be a mix, a sequence, a balance.

The former is a strategy all right, just not a grand one.

And no amount of good intell will overcome that mindset.

6:57AM

Tom around the web

Pride of place this week goes to New Yorker in DC
+ He linked The more interesting challenge from China.
+ And linked The "noneconomics" don't help on China, because the economics are doing just fine (and cross-posted at TPMCafe.
+ And cited Tom's favor of the soft kill for Iran.
+ And linked DoD Directive 3000 put in the context of Iraq.

+ The Newshoggers linked Cheney's outlived his era.
+ Egregious Moderation linked While I don’t much care for tell-alls from people who didn’t do all when in office …
+ So did MountainRunner.
+ gmgDesign linked The rule-sets are constantly under revision in the New Core.
+ Left Flank linked BFA at Powell's.
+ Whitcam Research linked In guerrillas we trust.
+ So did Danimal (in his ONLY post! ;-).
+ PurpleSlog linked SWJ to SysAdmin from below.
+ memeorandum linked Bremer's big mistake.
+ Kent's Imperative linked Times the blog bit back.
+ So did A Most Serene Republic.
+ SCSU Scholars is reading BFA.
+ Exurban League linked the weblog as one place to 'get the straight scoop on what's going on from some of the smartest minds out there'.
+ Eternity Road mentioned the Functioning Core.
+ Hot soup in my eye linked The "noneconomics" don't help on China, because the economics are doing just fine.
+ ZenPundit mentioned Tom in Mil-theory goes mainstream.
+ Blogs of War linked Vol. III's TOC (but it's 'Barnett', not 'Burnett' ;-).
+ Far East Cynic linked Ignatius of similar opinion.
+ Outside the Beltway linked Robb in the NYT.
+ Hidden Unities mentioned Tom's SysAdmin concept re: China.
+ Education Innovation is reading PNM.
+ Seems like Japan Observer always disagrees with Tom.

6:47AM

I think we have a quorum of Pulitzers!

OP-ED: 'Playing The Hand We've Dealt,' By Thomas L. Friedman, New York Times, May 20, 2007, Pg. WK12

Also from Friedman, making the connectivity argument (isolation is limited as a strategy) WRT Iran.

Hoagland and Friedman! I think we have a quorum of Pulitzers!

This is good, because the war drumbeat will only grow with other columnists who fear Israel will suffer unbearable danger, despite its arsenal of 200 nuclear warheads, when Iran someday gets its first.

6:44AM

Good analysis from Hoagland on Bush's post-presidency

OP-ED: Beyond Saber Rattling, By Jim Hoagland, Washington Post, May 20 2007; Page B07

Sober, but balanced, and no hyperbole.

2:53AM

Tom's column this week [updated]

As China joins the world, it learns by scandal

It seems like a lot of bad things are coming out of China nowadays, whether it's some new super-flu, counterfeit drug, tainted pet food or air pollution that reaches our West Coast. You may be wondering whether it was such a good thing for China to rapidly embrace globalization if all its negative "externalities" start becoming America's internalized problems.

The best crises are the ones you hear about, because that means the international press got a hold of them. That's important for several reasons.

Read on at KnoxNews.
Read on at Scripps News.

Update: Tom sends in this relevant article:

ARTICLE: 'Tainted Chinese Imports Common: In Four Months, FDA Refused 298 Shipments,' By Rick Weiss, Washington Post, May 20, 2007; Page A01

1:43PM

GIGO strategy

ARTICLE: Nuclear Report Could Require Fancy Footwork By Candidates, By Gerald F. Seib, Wall Street Journal, May 19, 2007, Pg. 2

Good example of media/academics selling Iran as the next automatic war. This is what passes as strategic thinking in our national dialogue.

It is pathetic.

Ask what effect you want. Don't jump to the idiotic binary false choice of war or not.

Honestly, this is GIGO grand strategy.

Don't ya just love having war packaged so cynically and yet so trivially?

1:41PM

Smart or fearful?

ARTICLE: "Spain: Immigrants Welcome: How Spain's open-border policy is driving an economic and social revival"

Somebody call Mark Steyn and clue in Sarkozy: immigration is how you win, and closing borders is how you lose. The smarties lead the way, the fearful wallow (otherwise known as the Brits and French, respectively).

1:16PM

Ingenuity: the unlimited resource

ARTICLE: 'Oil: Squeezing Out Every Drop: In Brunei, Shell has figured out how to extract rich but scattered deposits

7:40AM

Bulking up, slimming down

Spent most of yesterday in our master tub/jacuzzi, which I built just for middle-aged moments like this: rehabbing my knee as I start back up on two-a-day workouts (Bowflex and Precor elliptical). Already dropped 8 lbs packed on during my enforced downtime. Targetting another 24 (aren't we all).

Really spent time in tub working detailed chapter breakdown on Vol. III on white board (yes, the tub is that big). That was fun but brain-crunching. Couldn't turn it off last night when I tried to hit the hay.

Taking weekend off from it, but will tackle first draft of 8-10 pager to Neil Nyren come Monday. Neil and Putnam have right of first look, so you do the simpler version for them (you know me, here's the idea, here's the sked, you wanna?).

The fun part of the detailed outline is figuring where I want to slot everything in, especially all the big pieces I've worked on with Mark and Esquire since winter 05 (and those things I plan on trying between now and Vol. III's pub).

Other thing I worked on yesterday was to generate a model of my thinking approach. It ends up being 7 stages long, but it's pretty much how I always work. I have a contemporary author/thinker/model that I use for each stage, or people I've consciously and unconsciously modeled myself on over the years. I'm going to have a lot of fun with that chapter (essentially, "Thinking as a grand strategist"), because I will deconstruct a lot of cool stuff from across my career in ways I couldn't in PNM and BFA, because there I was all content and here I aim to uncover form.

So pay attention to that man behind the curtain!

Got nice voicemail from Mark Warren about the prelim outline I sent him. He's really jacked (you can hear in his voice) and feels this book will be so clear and easy for us to structure and fill in (narrativizing wherever possible) as a result.

My sense is that we have the character of the grand strategist down now after two books, so less translating this time and more pure, direct delivery of the how-to stuff, which I know will work because every time I've ever given interviews to that effect, people really like them, and as one comment recently pointed out, it makes sense for me to get this all out of me and down on paper at this point in my life.

I'm finally starting to achieve serious self-awareness (aka, wisdom) in my mid-40s, when, quite frankly, I always expected it to kick in, so I never really worried about lacking it previously (a concept I want to get across in this book--take your time in developing your skills).

I was quoted to this effect in a Newport Daily News profile a while back. I said something to the effect, "I'm not wise yet, but I'm in the same zip code." People took that as arrogance. I simply meant as ambition. I mean, shouldn't we all be in the wisdom zip code by our mid-40s? If you're not, when exactly do you plan on getting there?

But really, I think what got to people was my sense that I could actually plot out, over my life, a journey to wisdom, and honestly, I've been plotting that pathway since I was about 12, since I saw Nixon go to China. I said to myself then, "I want to get me some of that!"

It's taken me three-plus decades to finally figure out what "some of that" is.'

And being a natural salesman, as soon as I figure that out, I want to sell it to everyone I can. No sense keeping the candle under the bushel basket.

7:40AM

The stunning concentration of global poppy production in Afghanistan

ARTICLE: “Poppy Fields Are Now a Front Line in Afghanistan,” by James Risen, New York Times, 16 May 2007, p. A1.

Not surprised poppy production is back, especially in those southern areas where it has been traditionally grown primarily because Kabul has rarely had any reach there.

What stuns me is how poppy production has fallen everywhere in the world since the end of the Cold War.

As the interesting chart in this article shows, global acreage of poppies was over 600k back in 1990, with Afghanistan accounting for maybe 100k.

Despite all the stories about Taliban curtailing production, the chart shows a reasonably steady climb in acreage through 2000, then a huge drop in 2001, and then the climb is rejoined, accelerating dramatically in the past three years as the Taliban have resurged.

But here’s the weird part: the rest of the world’s acreage drops steadily since 1990, from over 500k to just 100k, so now Afghanistan is 80 percent of global production.

People toss out that stat and say this is clear evidence of our failure to tame the southern regions in Afghanistan (Pashtun part), but there’s little new in that notion.

What I wonder about is, how did we get an 80% cut in the rest of the world’s production? I mean, it’s not like it’s risen or fallen as a function of drops or rises in Afghanistan. The two seem completely unrelated.

Instead, the pattern since 1990 seems very clear: Afghan production rising, the rest of the world’s falling, and so Afghanistan’s dominance rises steadily.

7:39AM

China enters our 1950s on road construction

FEATURE: “In China, It’s Not Always Clear for Whom the Booth Tolls,” by Jim Yardly, New York Times, 16 May 2007, p. A4.

Story is about the patchwork of tolls around China, which sound a bit feudal in their localism.

More interesting to me is the factoid buried within:

By 2020, if all goes as planned, China will have completed roughly 53,000 miles of expressways, a network roughly equivalent to the Interstate System in the United States. China considers expressways crucial to maintaining its economic growth and developing its western and interior provinces.

But since China’s trying to finance so much of it with tolls, it’s running into a lot of popular avoidance behavior--go figure.

That won’t stop until the differential in time lost is seen as so great as to justify the cost, and that will be an interesting process to watch.

6:16AM

Blair would be a good, non-US WB pres

ARTICLE: "Debate Rises On World Bank Succession: Some World Leaders Oppose Traditional Prerogative of U.S.," By Peter S. Goodman and Mary Jordan, Washington Post, May 19, 2007; Page D01

This is inevitable and a good thing. We will not be the bulk SysAdmin provider, the New Core will. So somebody from their ranks would be more appropriate, over time.

Good interim step, as some suggest might be Blair. Don't want the first non-American to be anything other than a friend.

6:07AM

I don't see Pyongyang going away quietly

ARTICLE: Report: U.S. willing to make peace with North Korea by September, EAST-ASIA-INTEL.COM, World Tribune, May 18, 2007

OP-ED: 'Pyongyang's Perfidy,' By John R. Bolton, Wall Street Journal, May 18, 2007, Pg. 17

Like John Bolton, I remain very wary of rewarding North Korea on its nukes because no one's threatening Pyongyang (unlike Iran, where we've taken down regimes left and right) and because I don't think Kim will denuclearize in return (unlike with Israel v. Iran, there is no strategic imbalance to correct, so why would Kim give up a clear advantage?).

Iran, we have to find a place for in the future Middle East. It's a real country that's been around for centuries, not some post-WWII creation. The DPRK really has no future. They know it. We know it. Everyone knows it. All the Cold War-divided states are gone--except North Korea.

A peace treaty that lays the way for a slow economic buy-out of North Korea would be very welcome, but remembering how East Germany took detente (part of my dissertation), I just don't see Pyongyang going away quietly. It's either a bang or a rapid collapse. Either way, with this approach I fear North Korea's going to have a number of nukes that will complicate matters greatly.

Neither Clinton nor Bush will be fondly remembered at that point.

Thanks to Dan Hare for sending the World Tribune article.

6:04AM

Leviathan/SysAdmin inevitable

REPORT: A New Division of Labor: Meeting America's Security Challenges Beyond Iraq, RAND, May 17, 2007

The Leviathan-SysAdmin breakdown between the power-projecting Air Force and Navy and the boots-on-the-ground Army and Marines is both inevitable and years in the making.

It's just the way it's going to be, as this RAND report argues.

The SOF segment is always tricky: the civil affairs stuff and mil-mil is very SysAdmin, but the real trigger-pullers of SOF (and we're talking dozens, not hundreds) will be very Leviathan like in their application, as we saw recently in Somalia.

You can call that stability ops if you want, but it's just targeted killing or warfare fought strictly on the level of individuals.

5:59AM

Don't waste time in Europe

WIRE: U.S. drawdown in Europe may be too much, UPI, May 17, 2007

No offense to Craddock, but he's not doing his job right if we can't draw down from 100k to 60k in a Europe that sees no war and had no conventional threats. If it takes more than 60k to do theater security cooperation, then we're wasting our time there, because there's only so much effort we should be making for payoff in return, and if it takes more than 60k to get the Europeans up to snuff, we should spend our time and money and people elsewhere, where we can make a bigger difference and access a greater number of troops able to work with us inside the Gap.

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